@booklet {graham_getting_2012,
	title = {Getting Started with Topic Modeling and MALLET},
	journal = {The Programming Historian},
	year = {2012},
	note = {00000},
	abstract = {This web publication is devised as a how-to guide for working with MALLET. The goals of the lesson are: to "learn what topic modeling is and why you might want to employ it in your research", to "learn how to install and work with the MALLET", and finally to give "a good idea of how it can be used on a corpus of texts to identify topics found in the documents without reading them individually." Graham, Weingart, and Milligan begin by defining topic modelling as a tool that uncovers word patterns in a corpus of texts. Graham, Weingart, and Milligan make clear that topic modelling programs do not interpret the meaning of vocabulary in a text but are, rather, equipped to "to mathematically decompose a text." This online tutorial leads users through a step-by-step guide for installing and using MALLET. },
	url = {http://programminghistorian.org/lessons/topic-modeling-and-mallet},
	author = {Graham, Shawn and Weingart, Scott and Milligan, Ian}
}
